SummaryThe story follows a young lawyer, Arthur Kipps (Radcliffe), who is ordered to travel to a remote village and sort out a recently deceased client's papers. As he works alone in the client's isolated house, Kipps begins to uncover tragic secrets, his unease growing when he glimpses a mysterious woman dressed only in black. Receiving only silence fr... Read More
Directed By:James Watkins
Written By:Susan Hill, Jane Goldman
The Woman in Black
Metascore
Generally Favorable
62
User score
Generally Favorable
6.6
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Metascore
Generally Favorable
62
57% Positive
23 Reviews
23 Reviews
43% Mixed
17 Reviews
17 Reviews
0% Negative
0 Reviews
0 Reviews
Feb 2, 2012
88
In rare cases – and The Woman in Black is one of them – a story may be more atmospheric when less is left to the imagination.
Feb 2, 2012
80
The pleasures of the period ghost story The Woman in Black are something like the creepy shiver of delight you get from Edward Gorey's illustrated poem "The Gashlycrumb Tinies."
User score
Generally Favorable
6.6
58% Positive
201 Ratings
201 Ratings
34% Mixed
118 Ratings
118 Ratings
9% Negative
30 Ratings
30 Ratings
Oct 27, 2020
10
Old fashioned spooker delivering on its perilous period promise. The Woman in Black is directed by James Watkins and adapted to screenplay by Jane Goldman from Susan Hill's novel of the same name. It stars Daniel Radcliffe, Ciarán Hinds and Janet McTeer. Music is scored by Marco Beltrami and cinematography by Tim Maurice-Jones. Plot has Radcliffe as young London solicitor Arthur Kipps, who is sent to the North East village of Crythin Gifford to clear up the affairs of deceased woman Mrs. Drablow. When he arrives he finds that the memory of Drablow, and her remote house of Eel Marsh, holds the village in a grip of fear, particularly those who have children..... It's fitting that that bastion of British horror, Hammer Studios, should be behind this delightful period ghost story. For this positively oozes old fashioned values, harking back to all those wonderful spookers set around a creepy village that featured an even creepier castle or mansion at its core. More presently, the film has kindred links to the likes of The Orphanage, The Others and The Changeling, while the vengeful spirit acting out of Eel Marsh House is pumped by J-Horror like blood and Darkness Falls' Wraith **** nastiness. So clearly The Woman in Black is not a fresh arrival to the horror splinter where the ghost story resides. However, great period ghost story films are in short supply, and Watkins' film most assuredly is a great entry in the sub-genre. Propelling it forward is Watkins' (Eden Lake) excellent sense of mood and crafting of palpable unease. Quite often the better ghost story films are better because they operate on a what you don't see is what scares you more level, Watkins has managed to keep that aspect of his film whilst also giving us enough of the truly terrifying spirit to jolt us in our seats; often showing her to us and not to Radcliffe's Kipps! When the shocks come, and there are many and they are bona fide underwear soiling, they act as merciful releases from the built up dread, but then when Watkins doesn't deliver a shock, we are left waiting uneasily, darting our eyes all over the expansive frame, searching fruitlessly for a glimpse of something troubling. Did that wind up toy move? Is that a pallid face we just glimpsed in the shadows? That damn rocking chair is the scariest there has ever been! And on it goes.... A film such as this is only as good as the production design and setting for the story. Thankfully Watkins and his team have nailed it there as well. Eel Marsh House exteriors are Cotterstock Hall in Northamptionshire, perfectly foreboding, while the beautiful village of Halton Gill in the Yorkshire Dales gets a Hammer Horror make over to become Crythin Gifford. But it's with the interior of the house where the makers excel, an utterly unforgiving and upsetting place, brilliantly under lit by Tim Maurice-Jones for maximum scary effect. On the acting front the film rests solely on the shoulders of Radcliffe, and he comes up trumps. Initially its awkward accepting him as the father of a young boy, and once he gets to Crythin Gifford he is dwarfed by all the other adults who live there, but once the Victorian setting envelopes him the awkwardness evaporates and the characterisation becomes more realistic and easy to sympathise with. The character is changed from the book, meaning Radcliffe has to carry inner torment as well as exuding an outer coat of trepidation blended with stoic fear. It should be noted that for much of the picture he is acting on his own, reacting to the house and the overgrown gardens and marshes, in short he is terrific and it augers well for his adult acting career. In support Hinds and McTeer are pillars of professionalism, with McTeer's Mrs. Daily a creepy character in her own right, but it's also another neat meditation on grief that sits alongside Arthur Kipps'. The ending is also changed from that in the novel, and it's already proving to be divisive. How you react to it, and it is up for a two-fold interpretation, may dampen your overall enjoyment of the picture? Personally I have no issue with it, I was still sunk in the cinema chair breathing heavily at that point! The certification and the presence of Radcliffe ensures that a teenage audience will flock to see it, many of whom will not get the "horror" film that they are after. Hopefully the word will get out that this really is only a film for those who love a good boo jump ghost story of old, that's its target audience, and that's the people whose reviews you should trust. 10/10
Oct 1, 2020
10
The best horror movie I have seen in a while it has a great atmosphere and it is overall an amazing movie.
Feb 2, 2012
70
If director James Watkins's second film is about as scary as the haunted house your big cousins made in the basement, Radcliffe, as widowed lawyer Arthur Kipps, at least gives a moving portrayal of grief.
Feb 3, 2012
63
There's little that's new, revealing or stylish about this basic-black horror story, but if you've got a Goth sensibility, it might suit you.
Feb 8, 2012
50
Boring and sedentary, not to mention only occasionally coherent, this creaking-door mystery is not much of a vehicle to display young Mr. Radcliffe's range and charm.
Feb 2, 2012
50
The Woman in Black has lovely period atmosphere. Unfortunately, it doesn't have much else besides atmosphere.
Feb 2, 2012
40
A credible suspense story with a surprisingly bold ending, The Woman In Black is a solid step away from Harry Potter for star Daniel Radcliffe - while it, too, is British and fantastical, the tone is sinister, adult and bleak.
Feb 25, 2014
10
I like this movie most horror movies have an unnecessary amount of swearing but not this one. I showed a trailer to my friend and he said it look to scary for a PG-13 movie
Oct 12, 2024
6
"The Woman in Black" feels like it's from another time—and I mean that as a compliment. It has a thick, almost tangible atmosphere, excellent acting, Marco Beltrami’s evocative music, and a tragic story. The result is a Victorian ghost tale about the Lady in Black, who children would be wise to steer clear of. ️ Reviews from 2012 didn’t really focus on the film itself but more on Daniel Radcliffe, who had spent the last decade playing Harry Potter and, in many people’s minds, would never be able to play anything else. The same was said about Robert Pattinson after "Twilight" and Jennifer Lawrence after "The Hunger Games." I consider all three to be great English-speaking actors. ️ In any case, I think the film was done a disservice because it’s a true Hammer film translated into the 21st century. Shot on film at a time when cinema was dominated by shallow, post-converted 3D, it used real locations and avoided too many jump scares or other gimmicks. Even the occasional awkward green screen shot in vehicles feels like a nod to the rear-screen projection of original Hammer films. What’s left isn’t particularly groundbreaking—it reminds you of "The Others" and "El Orfanato," or in video games, of "Layers of Fear," "Pineview Drive," and "The Vanishing of Ethan Carter." But within the boundaries of a haunted house film, James Watkins clearly thrives. I, for one, had a great time searching for the Woman in Black lurking in the background. She’s there more often than you think.
Mar 20, 2014
3
walking, walking and walking. Is all the main character does. He hear a noise in one room and walks, this becomes boring! sure it was scary the first time they did it. But overtime, its a bore.
Jul 22, 2012
3
Desperate times call for desperate measures, which is why The Woman In Black had to resort to jump scares in order to make it look like a horror film. Peppered with suspense and shadows, it soon became a clunky mess of awkward dialogue, Daniel turning his head dramatically and sudden events. Although I did end up being scared, it became clear that this is not how a horror film should work - I'm beginning to think less of horror films because of the use of 'suspense' and jump scares in order to make them look clever and scary. The ending didn't let the film down because, despite that fact that the ending didn't tie up any loose ends, it just felt the same all the way through. What kind of vehicle is this to boost the variety of Daniel Radcliffe's career? In my opinion, he's still on the train at Platform 9 3/4.
Production Company:
- CBS Films
- Cross Creek Pictures
- Hammer Films
- Alliance Cinema
- Talisman Productions
- Exclusive Media Group
- UK Film Council
- Filmgate
- Half Vast Films
- Alliance Films
- British Film Institute (BFI)
- Film i Väst
- Finngate Pictures
- Vertigo Entertainment
Release Date:Feb 3, 2012
Duration:1 h 35 m
Rating:PG-13
Tagline:Do you believe in ghosts?
Website:
Awards
Golden Trailer Awards
• 1 Win & 3 Nominations
Fright Meter Awards
• 1 Win & 3 Nominations
Fangoria Chainsaw Awards
• 3 Nominations




























